4.0 Article

Automatic mass detection in mammograms using deep convolutional neural networks

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL IMAGING
Volume 6, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

SPIE-SOC PHOTO-OPTICAL INSTRUMENTATION ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1117/1.JMI.6.3.031409

Keywords

mass detection; mammograms; convolution neural networks; transfer learning; computer aided detection; breast image analysis

Funding

  1. SMARTER project - Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness of Spain [DPI2015-68442]
  2. Secretariat of Universities and Research, Ministry of Economy and Knowledge, Government of Catalonia [ECO/1794/2015 FIDGR-2016]
  3. NVIDIA Corporation

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With recent advances in the field of deep learning, the use of convolutional neural networks (CNNs) in medical imaging has become very encouraging. The aim of our paper is to propose a patch-based CNN method for automated mass detection in full-field digital mammograms (FFDM). In addition to evaluating CNNs pre-trained with the ImageNet dataset, we investigate the use of transfer learning for a particular domain adaptation. First, the CNN is trained using a large public database of digitized mammograms (CBIS-DDSM dataset), and then the model is transferred and tested onto the smaller database of digital mammograms (INbreast dataset). We evaluate three widely used CNNs (VGG16, ResNet50, InceptionV3) and show that the InceptionV3 obtains the best performance for classifying the mass and nonmass breast region for CBIS-DDSM. We further show the benefit of domain adaptation between the CBIS-DDSM (digitized) and INbreast (digital) datasets using the InceptionV3 CNN. Mass detection evaluation follows a fivefold cross-validation strategy using free-response operating characteristic curves. Results show that the transfer learning from CBIS-DDSM obtains a substantially higher performance with the best true positive rate (TPR) of 0.98 +/- 0.02 at 1.67 false positives per image (FPI), compared with transfer learning from ImageNet with TPR of 0.91 +/- 0.07 at 2.1 FPI. In addition, the proposed framework improves upon mass detection results described in the literature on the INbreast database, in terms of both TPR and FPI. (C) The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported License.

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